And pretty much everyone in attendance had the same joke about Mayor Menino.

Photo by Bryanna Cappadona
The highly anticipated opening of the Old State House time capsule happened Thursday afternoon held at Skylight Studios in Woburn. Although materials inside the capsule were intended to be extracted and revealed at the event, the shoe-sized box appeared to be too jam-packed to dive into without harming any of the century-old materials.
Based on what is visible from the birds-eye opening of the capsule, a red hardcover book is inside and surrounded by papers. Elizabeth Roscio, the archives manager at the Bostonian Society, says the papers look like newsprint and appear to be in remarkably good condition. Roscio plans to bring the box back to the processing table at the Bostonian Society’s archives center. Beginning on Tuesday, Roscio will work as quickly as possible to remove all the materials without causing damage.
“I was expecting a pile of newspapers,” Roscio said. “It’s a great surprise [the contents] are in such good condition. The book was a surprise.”
Earlier in September, professional sculptor at Skylight Studios Bob Shure told Boston he’d take the lead in restoring the lion and unicorn at his studio in Woburn. The gold sculptures were ascended off the Old State House in Downtown Boston on September 14. Brian LeMay, president of the Bostonian Society—the nonprofit group that manages the Old State House—said a time capsule filled with present-day materials that best define the city will be placed inside of the lion upon its restoration.
The idea to place a contemporary time capsule inside the lion statue came from the Boston Daily Globe archives, an article written in 1901 that told a specific story about a copper box filled with memorabilia dating back more than 100 years and was placed inside the lion’s head. Historians, Bob Shure at Skylight Studios, and the Bostonian Society confirmed the rumors of a real time capsule on September 23.
Although the materials are currently not confirmed, the Society does have a clue on what they’ll find. LeMay and Roscio both entertained the idea of the red hardcover being a family diary of Samuel D. Rogers, the carpenter in 1901 who worked on the installation of the statues. A photo of Boston’s mayor in 1901 is also suspected to be inside.
“Who was the mayor in 1901?” LeMay asked, to which the media collectively quipped, “probably Tom Menino.”
As for the new time capsule, only two items have been confirmed to be placed inside: Mayor Marty Walsh promised to provide a photo for the box (it seems fitting to carry on a new tradition), and a 2013 Boston Marathon medal. LeMay also says the Society is working on ways to make sure this new time capsule doesn’t get lost, and is “willing to take suggestions on how to transmit the information” to a new generation of Bostonians.
The Bostonian Society will also be taking suggestions from the public about what to place inside the new time capsule. Inquiries can be sent to the Bostonian Society at heather@bostonhistory.org, or by using the hashtag #LionandUnicorn on Twitter.
Heather Leet, director for development at the Bostonian Society, speaks briefly before the time capsule opening at Skylight Studios in Woburn.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


Brian LeMay, president of the Bostonian Society, with the lion.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


Skylight Studio artist Bob Shure removes the crown of the lion, revealing that both the head and the crown are hollow.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


This is the first sight of the capsule being carefully removed by Shure.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona

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Using his own tools, Shure’s opening process took about ten minutes.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


Elizabeth Roscio, Library Archives Manager at the Bostonian Society, reveals the contents of the capsule.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


The box is 8 inches by 12 inches and 6 inches high—about the size of a shoe box.Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


Photos by Bryanna Cappadona


Photos by Bryanna Cappadona

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Photos by Bryanna Cappadona

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